Recommended Weekend Reads

Did Trump Just Hand China the Tools to Beat the US in AI?, The Strategic Mineral Alliance the West Needs, US Construction’s 5 Decades of Decline, and Democrats Face A Voter Registration Crisis

August 22 - 24, 2025

Here are our recommended reads from reports and articles we read in the last week. We hope you find these useful and that you have a relaxing weekend.   And let us know if you or someone you know wants to be added to our distribution list. 

AI’s impact on National Security and GDP

  • Trump Just Handed China the Tools to Beat America in AI   Matt Pottinger & Liza Tobin/The Free Press

    Pottinger, who served as Deputy National Security Advisor to President Trump in his first term, and Tobin, write President Trump’s team just gave China’s rulers the technology they need to beat us in the artificial intelligence race. If he doesn’t reverse this decision, they argue, it may be remembered as the moment when America surrendered the technological advantage needed to bring manufacturing home and keep our nation secure.  They argue we should not believe the claims that these chips aren’t very advanced. China’s lack of unfettered access to U.S.-designed AI chips, they write, is America’s clearest advantage in the AI race. By reversing the ban, the White House is helping Beijing’s Communist regime close the gap.

  • Global Compute and National Security   Center for New America Security

    The United States faces a choice: leverage its current lead to promote U.S. AI infrastructure and applications globally, while preserving its edge at the frontier; or continue to primarily focus on protection, while other countries gradually narrow the gap. As Michael Kratsios, President Donald Trump’s science and technology advisor, put it: “It is not enough to seek to protect America’s technological lead. We also have a duty to promote American technological leadership.”  The protect and promote strategy outlined in this report offers a path to sustainable leadership that both safeguards critical capabilities and expands American influence in the global AI ecosystem.

  • The Macro Impact of AI on GDP     the Overshoot

    Capital spending related to AI is growing so rapidly that it is now meaningful relative to the $30 trillion U.S. economy. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was about 0.2%-0.3% larger in 2025Q2 than it would have been if businesses’ spending on data center construction, computers and peripheral equipment, and communications equipment had grown in line with the 2011Q1-2022Q31 trend.  Moreover, this impact is likely understated, because existing methodologies are (probably) not fully capturing the investment being done by the five companies responsible for the bulk of the data center buildout: Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle. Those five companies also happen to be the ones with the five largest capex budgets in the entire S&P 500 in 2025Q2.  I estimate that U.S. GDP would be about 0.4% higher than currently reported—or about 0.6% higher than if there had been no AI boom—if the capital expenditures of the big 5 were fully incorporated into the official data. Or put yet another way, the growth in direct AI-related capex by the big 5 since mid-2023 would correspond to about 10% of the total increase in the dollar value of U.S. GDP over the past two years. Including additional capital spending on power plants and electricity generation would lead to an even larger number.

 

Geoeconomics

  • Reform or Realignment? The Geopolitical Lessons of Bretton Woods    Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

    The history of Bretton Woods sharpens questions about the issues and interdependencies that can provide the basis for any reform of existing institutions.

  • Five Decades of Decline: U.S. Construction Sector Productivity   Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

    Construction labor productivity in the US fell by more than 30 percent from 1970 to 2020, while overall U.S. economic productivity doubled over the same period; Despite potential biases in price deflators, multiple studies confirm that the productivity decline is real, with physical measures like housing units per worker showing similar stagnation, and; Increasing land-use regulations may be a plausible cause for the decline, as more strict land-use regulations disincentivize construction companies from pursuing larger projects, keeping them relatively small. In addition, this reduces incentives for technological innovation and economies of scale.

  •  The Ghost in Capitalism's Machine: Industrial policy returns to global trade   Peter Draper/ Hindrich Foundation

    Industrial policy is the ghost in capitalism’s machine — always present, rarely acknowledged. Even laissez-faire economies flirt with it, while denying its existence. It attracts polarized views anchored in ideological conceptions over how much power to accord states, or freedom to markets. Industrial policy is making a comeback as geopolitical contestation amongst the major powers sharpens.

 

 

Russia, Ukraine, and the Economic and Security Implications of a Possible Ceasefire

  • Tanks, Tech, and Tungsten: The Strategic Mineral Alliance the West Needs     War on the Rocks

    What good is a tank if you can’t get the metals to build it?  This week’s meeting between U.S., Ukrainian, and European leaders showed potential progress towards security cooperation. And while the new U.S.-Ukrainian Reconstruction Investment Fund agreement marks an important step toward increasing the resilience of both U.S. and European supply chains, there is more work to be done. Building on this momentum, the United States and the European Union should seek closer critical minerals supply chain cooperation.  There are several opportunities for the two economies to work together by focusing on defense and security, rather than the economic and clean energy framing of the past. Tighter cooperation could strengthen the E.U. defense-industrial base, enhance military readiness, and strengthen NATO’s deterrence posture while enabling the United States to secure critical minerals, preserve manufacturing capacity, and redirect precious resources to the Indo-Pacific. Supply chain cooperation would also help both sides reduce dependence on China, which dominates the critical minerals market by creating oversupply and using export restrictions. Indeed, the China challenge requires the United States and Europe to work together.

  • Russia’s Imperial Black Sea Strategy   Foreign Affairs

    Russia’s aggression against Ukraine and other neighbors is transforming the Black Sea into Eurasia’s strategic frontier. Russia has disrupted flows of energy, food, and other commodities; generated millions of migrants; and heightened insecurity not just in Ukraine but also across the entire Black Sea region. These efforts constitute part of a much longer and larger strategy. Russia does not merely seek to dominate Ukraine. It wants to render each of the other five states that border the Black Sea—as well as Moldova, which borders Romania and Ukraine and whose waters flow into the sea—subservient to its interests so that it can exercise veto power over choices these countries make. Moscow also aspires to use the Black Sea as a platform from which to project power and influence throughout the Middle East, the Mediterranean, and the Caucasus.

 

U.S. Politics & Elections 

  • The Democratic Party Faces a Voter Registration Crisis    The New York Times

    According to an analysis conducted by the New York Times, the Democratic Party is hemorrhaging voters long before they even go to the polls.  Of the 30 states that track voter registration by political party, Democrats lost ground to Republicans in every single one between the 2020 and 2024 elections — and often by a lot.  That four-year swing toward the Republicans adds up to 4.5 million voters, a deep political hole that could take years for Democrats to climb out of.

  • Trump’s Tariffs and ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ Face More Opposition Than Support as His Job Rating Slips   Pew Research Center

    The latest national survey by Pew Research Center – conducted Aug. 4-10 among 3,554 adults – finds that a 53% majority say President Trump is making the federal government work worse, while only about half as many (27%) say he is making the government work better. (Two-in-ten say he is making things about equally better and worse.)  Both Republicans and Democrats now offer more negative assessments of Trump’s impact on the federal government than they had predicted in a survey conducted in the weeks immediately following Trump’s inauguration. Six months into his second term, public evaluations of President Donald Trump’s job performance have grown more negative. His job approval stands at 38% (60% disapprove), and fewer Americans now attribute several positive personal characteristics to him than did so during the campaign.  Two of the new administration’s signature accomplishments – the rollout of its tariff policies and the tax and spending law known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill” – garner considerably more disapproval than approval:

    • 61% of Americans disapprove of Trump’s tariff policies, while 38% approve.

    • 46% disapprove of the tax and spending law, while 32% approve (23% say they are unsure).

    • 55% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents now say Trump is improving the way the federal government works – while 16% say he’s making things worse and 29% say his effect is a mix of positive and negative. In the weeks after he took office, 76% of Republicans expected he would make government work better.

    • 87% of Democrats and Democratic leaners say Trump is worsening the way government functions, up from 78% who said this at the beginning of his term.

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